Professional writers mentor aspiring young people in San Francisco

In San Francisco, there’s a program that pairs aspiring young writers with professional mentors. It’s called WritersCorps and it’s sponsored by the San Francisco Arts Commission. One of the students is apprentice DeAsia Landrum.

DEASIA LANDRUM: I haven’t been writing for very long, but there’s just something in me that loves poetry, just loves the way it sounds, and the message people get through when they speak, using these crazy tones and using these like awesome metaphors, and that’s why I write today. I told the apprentice program that I wanted to write because I didn’t feel like there were a lot of writers like myself and so I wanted to write myself into something better, into history in a way, write myself into a legacy. Here's an excerpt from her untitled poem:

It’s safe to say that I will never see myself the way my Father sees me

He tells me I that I was made in His likeness and His image, but don’t find it cliché when I say

that Daddy’s little girl isn’t happy

See, my Father is something like a renaissance man

And I, His avant-garde masterpiece

Deliberate in His intent, He fashioned me out of ebony to reflect just how brilliant darkness

shines in the light

However, pop art has made me disillusioned with His artistry and I have tried to recreate myself

into something a little more acceptable

A little more fashionable

A little more mainstream

A little more white

See, my Father painted my skin the shade of night so people could see just how beautiful the

Sun’s embrace is when it blankets bone and becomes flesh

However, somewhere along the lines I think my Father forgot just how intimidating the night can

be for people who fear not being able to see past themselves

So, I’ve taken it upon myself to fix His mistake and recreate myself

Picking up where He left off, I started to lay a blank slate on top of my Father’s artwork to paint

the moon in-between the small cracks my melanin left open in the haste to fill the spaces